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Anesth Analg 2006;102:1294-1295
© 2006 International Anesthesia Research Society
doi: 10.1213/01.ANE.0000199218.89356.F2


LETTER TO THE EDITOR

Intraoperative Nasogastric Tube Insertion with Non-ProSeal Laryngeal Mask Airway in Place

Amitabh Dutta, MD, Neelam Ganguly, MD, Jayashree Sood, MD, FFARCS, PGDHHM, and V. P. Kumra, MD, DA, DAC

Department of Anaesthesiology, Pain & Perioperative Medicine, Sir Ganga Ram Hospital, New Delhi, India, duttaamitabh{at}yahoo.co.in

To the Editor:

It is difficult to place a nasogastric tube (NGT) behind a properly positioned laryngeal mask airway (LMA). We describe a simple technique of NGT insertion in two patients who had an LMA in place.

The first patient was a non-fasted primigravida scheduled for emergency cesarean section for fetal bradycardia. Following several failed intubation attempts, a #3.0-LMA-ClassicTM was used to secure the airway. After safe delivery of the baby, the surgeon requested placement of an NGT for stomach evacuation. A well-lubricated 6.0-mm inner diameter cuffed red rubber endotracheal tube (ETT) (Rusch, Munchen, Germany) was passed through right nostril into the nasopharynx and further into hypopharynx, where the cuff was inflated to maximum. The NGT (Romsons Sci & Surg Ltd., Agra, India) was introduced through the nasal ETT into the stomach without difficulty (Fig. 1). Residual fluid (50 mL) and gases were suctioned.


Figure 174
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Figure 1. Side view of the patient showing nasogastric tube placed through nasal cuffed red rubber tube behind laryngeal mask airway cuff.

 

The second case was a 55-yr-old woman scheduled for laparoscopic abdominal hysterectomy. Again, after several failed intubation attempts, a #3.0 intubating LMA (ILMA-FastrachTM) was inserted to secure the airway. A fiberoptic bronchoscope (FOB)-assisted ILMA endotracheal tube was then guided into the trachea. We could not remove the LMA because the stabilizing rod was unavailable. The surgeon requested for evacuation of gases before institution of carboperitoneum and trocar insertion. A well-lubricated NGT with a soft angiographic guide wire was passed into the nasopharynx. An orally introduced FOB was advanced behind the ILMA cuff and used to guide the NGT behind the partially inflated ILMA cuff. Both were advanced concurrently (cm by cm; NGT first, then FOB, and so on). Once the NGT was advanced beyond the hypopharynx (the tip of LMA), the NGT alone was advanced into the esophagus and subsequently into the stomach (Fig. 2).


Figure 274
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Figure 2. Lateral fluoroscopic image depicting intubating laryngeal mask airway (ILMA) and ILMA - tracheal tube in place. Nasogastric tube is passed behind the ILMA.

 

Meta-analysis has shown that gastric tube insertion is less successful behind the LMA cuff as compared with via the drain tube (1). Ozer et al. delineated the utility of FOB imaging to avoid failure of NGT insertion in intubated patients (2).

Our first method used an inflated red rubber ETT cuff to displace the LMA cuff forward whereas the second technique used FOB-guided NGT insertion. These techniques may be helpful for nasogastric tube insertion in patients with an LMA in place.

References

  1. Brimacombe J, Keller C, Fullekrug B, et al. A multicenter study comparing the ProSeal with the classic laryngeal mask airway in anesthetised non-paralysed patients. Anesthesiology 2002;96:289–95.[Web of Science][Medline]
  2. Ozer S, Benumof JL. Oro- and nasogastric tube passage in intubated patients: fiberoptic description of where they go at the laryngeal level and how to make them enter the esophagus. Anesthesiology 1999;91:137–43.[Medline]




This Article
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Lippincott, Williams & Wilkins Anesthesia & Analgesia® is published for the International Anesthesia Research Society® by Lippincott Williams & Wilkins with the assistance of Stanford University Libraries' HighWire Press®. Copyright 2006 by the International Anesthesia Research Society. Online ISSN: 1526-7598   Print ISSN: 0003-2999 HighWire Press